Pages

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Cognitive Illness

I'm dealing with a workplace annoyance that will probably shorten this post, so let's dive right into Neuromania and Darwinitis. Gosh! That's not very charitable. He makes them sound like diseases or something.

Well, perhaps they are. There are obviously physical diseases. There are also mental illnesses. Why not cognitive ones, i.e., systematically dysfunctional ideas such as communism?

Disease as such cannot be understood outside the context of function, in that pathology is what happens when your telos is messed up. Rocks or stars or mountains can't be pathological because they have no purpose. More generally, nature is never wrong because it is never right.

Rather, nature is all Is, all the time. Except there is no time either. Nor even any space. Those two nebulous rascals require a perspective, and until self-aware humans happen upon the scene, there are no perspectives. We'll return to this perspective in due time.

I can see that Tallis is particularly concerned with rescuing humanism from the humanists. It goes without saying -- or saying with contempt -- that he also wants to rescue it from the religionists, but he spends very little time on them. Neuromaniacs and Darwinitwits are at least worthy of mockery. Religionists aren't even worthy, at least in this book.

Thus, he begins with a prominent atheist who absolutely savages human beings. The favorable review from Publisher's Weekly says

Humans think they are free, conscious beings, when in truth they are deluded animals.... Like the Christians of former times, scientists are caught up in the web of power; they struggle for survival and success; their view of the world is a patchwork of conventional beliefs....

He tears down institutions, especially consciousness, self, free will and morality [miraculously doing so without consciousness, self, free will, and morality!], and questions our ability to solve the problems of overpopulation and overconsumption....

Other animals do not need a purpose in life. Can we not think of the aim of life as being simply to see? This comforting question punctuates an otherwise profoundly disturbing meditation on humankind's real place in the world.

Booklist too sees no obvious flaw, let alone sickness:

Gray attacks the belief that humans are different from and superior to animals. Invoking pure Darwinism, he savages every perspective from which humans appear as anything more than a genetic accident that has produced a highly destructive species (homo rapiens) -- a species that exterminates other species at a phenomenal rate as our swelling numbers despoil the global environment. Gray explains the human refusal to confront the darker realities of our nature largely as the result of how we have consoled ourselves with the myths of Christianity and its secular offspring, humanism and utopianism.

Now, that is rich: because of Christianity, humans refuse to confront the darker realities of our nature. I'm not sure what could be darker than a primordial fall in collusion with the source of all evil (not to mention being permanently exiled from any terrestrial utopia), but we'll leave that to the side. The more interesting question is how Gray manages to elude the blade of his own condemnation. For if humanity is as monstrous as he claims, it could never produce a consciousness as angelic as his.

More cognitive sickness, from the first amazon reviewer (I don't think I could stomach wading through all 92):

If you think that you are not straw dogs that will be crushed ruthlessly by heaven [?] and earth, then you will have to read this book, among the most important philosophical books ever written.... Anybody who knows anything about human history cannot possibly disagree with Gray that we are a very violent species, although not as dangerous as the religions we have created, particularly the monotheistic religions such as Christianity.

Another devastating critique of our civilization is the way we have treated animals, of whom we are but one species but from whom we have usually tried to separate. The role of Christianity [pardon the French, but WTF?] in this endless tragedy of torture and unspeakable murder is appalling, but the consequences are even worse.

Now, that is a lot of stupid. Talk about an animal hater! Why on earth is the guy condemning human animals? Again, if you are going to revert to nature, there is only the Is. No oughts allowed. If everybody is Harvey Weinstein -- homo rapiens -- then nobody is.

While I can no doubt get a bit sanctimonious, at least I try to leaven it with a little irony. But this is a truly unhinged self-righteousness of the kind so ably described by Michael Polanyi, i.e., religious sentiment utterly detached from religion. These people like to speak with ignorant contempt of the "Old Testament God" of their malevolent imagination. In which case I would say: Here comes their New Testament, same as the Old Testament.

So, for a guy who sees volition, and hence morality, as an illusion, Gray sure is a strident moralist. (Additional ewww factor: his work has been praised by George Soros.)

In the words of Jordan Peterson: dude, clean up your own house. At least Jehovah gives humans a second chance (and more). His justice is tempered by -- if not a dimension of -- his mercy. But I don't see any mercy in Gray's grim characterization.

Which is fine: if humans are as awful as he describes, then so be it. As we say -- or insist, rather -- there is no privilege higher than truth.

Wait. Truth? How did that ever find its way into a purely material cosmos? That is what you call impossible. As Tallis asks, "Was it really natural selection that eventually brought into being creatures that could see that they were naturally selected?" If so, on what basis should we believe them, or even have a category called "belief," let alone "truth"?

Speaking of which, I need some Oxygen. Dávila, arranged hierarchically from truth to truth:

He who does not doubt does not shout.

Truths are whatever any imbecile refutes.

The man does not escape from his prison of paradoxes except by means of a vertical act of faith.

The truth is the happiness of the intelligence.

7 comments:

  1. Humans think they are free, conscious beings, when in truth they are deluded animals....

    Now wait just a cottonpickin minute! If that's true, then humans are literally just doing what comes naturally when they seek meaning and purpose in life. Darwinially speaking, faith is an evolutionary adaptation which confers tremendous reproductive fitness upon those who express that trait. For a materialist, just that simple truth ought to be enough to make them want to shut it, even if they don't themselves believe in religious truth. Sadly, that ascribes too much wisdom to the average strident atheist moralist.

    Now, that is rich: because of Christianity, humans refuse to confront the darker realities of our nature.

    Clearly, he has never heard of a good hellfire and brimstone sermon. Or looked upon the art of Hieronymous Bosch.

    Almost did a spit-take with home rapiens. That's a keeper.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Then again, what Christians call "the darker realities of our nature," the average leftist describes as, for instance, a "healthy sexual appetite," (read recently describing the wholesome lifestyle of Gore Vidal).

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wholesome <--------------------------------------------------------------------------> Gore Vidal

    ReplyDelete
  4. lol - I should have included a /sarc tag.

    Calling his appetite healthy is a bit like calling the diet of the average 600 pound human healthy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Consider:

    Mind: a perceptual phenomenon caused by electro-chemical reactions between synapses in the brain, all occurring under the known laws of physics.

    Body: An assemblage of symbiotic cells with genetic data developed over eons by natural selection, all occurring under the known laws of physics.

    Raccoons, it is necessary to look at these and say, "Perhaps these might be the case." None of the logical, philosophic, or theological arguments put forth by the blog author, or others like him, have been sufficient to put these hypotheses down for the count. Bob, you must know that, or otherwise why must you keep trying? Your kinship to Tallis is understandable; you both are trying to slay the same dragon, and "the enemy of my enemy is my friend."

    But, acceptance might be the best way. It feels bleak at first, but once you get used to it, new pathways to meaning may open up. Take consolation in the fact that the Creator, who must necessarily exist, has set it up the way we find it.

    Recall on Dune, Paul Atreides put his hand in a black box, wherein the illusion his hand was being cremated in a furnace was very real. He was cautioned not to take his hand out, despite powerful reflexes to save his hand from destruction. He prevailed, and upon removing his hand, found it intact.

    Do we find ourselves here on Earth in such a black box, a test of souls? Even the most blessed, happy life, is darkened by ferocious currents of despair, unfortunate happenstance, old age, losses of all sorts, tribulations, and physical irritations like acne, hang-nails, skin tags, diabetes, and a host of other worries. Literally no soul is spared vexations. Are these vexations the very thing we are here for?

    So, evidence of God as shown by the nature of the human mind and body...would that it be so, would that it be so... but we don't have it. Endure, just endure.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous's comment reminds me of a quote of an early Cosmonaut Yuri something-or-other when orbiting the earth he said something like "No God up here". It's settled science, don't you understand?
    This blog is all about looking at things differently, "new pathways" as you say. I find the current scientistic consensus as insufficient, and have come to believe my imagination can find new paths where intellect cannot go unaided by imagination. That is what explorers do.
    Anonymous, pursue your path, hey,maybe you are right, see what it gets you. I read this blog because I think this guy is on to something important. Peace out!

    ReplyDelete

I cannot talk about anything without talking about everything. --Chesterton

Fundamentally there are only three miracles: existence, life, intelligence; with intelligence, the curve springing from God closes on itself like a ring that in reality has never been parted from the Infinite. --Schuon

The quest, thus, has no external 'object,' but is reality itself becoming luminous for its movement from the ineffable, through the Cosmos, to the ineffable. --Voegelin

A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. --Wittgenstein